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Joseph G. Rosenbaum

Researcher at United States Geological Survey

Publications -  37
Citations -  785

Joseph G. Rosenbaum is an academic researcher from United States Geological Survey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sediment & Glacial period. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 37 publications receiving 742 citations.

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Compositional changes in sediments of subalpine lakes, Uinta Mountains (Utah): evidence for the effects of human activity on atmospheric dust inputs

TL;DR: Sediments in Hidden Lake in the Uinta Mountains of northeastern Utah contain records of atmospheric mineral-dust deposition as revealed by differences in mineralogy and geochem-istry of lake sediments relative to Precambrian clastic rocks in the watersheds as mentioned in this paper.
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Greigite (Fe3S4) as an indicator of drought – The 1912–1994 sediment magnetic record from White Rock Lake, Dallas, Texas, USA

TL;DR: In this article, combined magnetic and geochemical studies were conducted on sediments from White Rock Lake, a reservoir in suburban Dallas (USA), to investigate how land use has affected sediment and water quality since the reservoir was filled in 1912.
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Aeromagnetic study of the Island of Hawaii

TL;DR: An aeromagnetic study of the Island of Hawaii provides new insight on magnetic properties of subsurface rock and geologic structure as discussed by the authors, which is useful in delineating the lateral extent of local shield structures, such as rifts, summit calderas, pit craters, and vent fissures.
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Record of middle Pleistocene climate change from Buck Lake, Cascade Range, southern Oregon—Evidence from sediment magnetism, trace-element geochemistry, and pollen

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the magnetic properties of sediment sediments from a middle Pleistocene lake with changes in climate to changes in pollen assemblages in the mid-Pleistocene sediment from Buck Lake.
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Record of Late Pleistocene Glaciation and Deglaciation in the Southern Cascade Range. II. Flux of Glacial Flour in a Sediment Core from Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon

TL;DR: In this paper, the magnetic properties and grain-size data of cored sediments from Caledonia Marsh on the west side of the lake provided a continuous record of the flux of glacial flour spanning the last ≈37 000 calendar years.